Genie wrote:Liking Cantr is a bit like liking cats. Sometimes you enjoy it and you have good time together, sometimes it hurts you, annoys you very much or sleeps all the day, you still keep a bond with it.

Also, it'd be nice if the pillows included what material the cases were made out of? Say, there's the hemp, silk, and cotton ones, and I think it'd be nice if there was a way to tell which fabric was used.

Yes. And... Towels and napkins should also be able to have a description.

Finchington wrote:Also, it'd be nice if the pillows included what material the cases were made out of? Say, there's the hemp, silk, and cotton ones, and I think it'd be nice if there was a way to tell which fabric was used.

Lots of RP items don't have custom descriptions enabled. I'm not sure if it's was deliberately done or just no one got around to it. If you want to suggest any items (napkins, combs, pipes, pillows) to have descriptions, please mention which tool you think is most appropriate for this.

*Wiro wrote:Lots of RP items don't have custom descriptions enabled. I'm not sure if it's was deliberately done or just no one got around to it. If you want to suggest any items (napkins, combs, pipes, pillows) to have descriptions, please mention which tool you think is most appropriate for this.

Because those are the tools used to make them and I can imagine them being used to alter them further.

Also, Woolen blanket: needle.

Oh, and I can imagine a six-sided die being carved so each face has a shape on it, like a card suits or other symbol, instead of numbers or dots.ivory/jade: iron/bronze carving knifestone: iron/bronze chiselwooden: [bone/bronze] knife

Mark Twain wrote:Truth is stranger than fiction, but it is because Fiction is obliged to stick to possibilities; Truth isn't.

*Wiro wrote:Lots of RP items don't have custom descriptions enabled. I'm not sure if it's was deliberately done or just no one got around to it. If you want to suggest any items (napkins, combs, pipes, pillows) to have descriptions, please mention which tool you think is most appropriate for this.

“It begins with a character, usually, and once he stands up on his feet and begins to move, all I can do is trot along behind him with a paper and pencil trying to keep up long enough to put down what he says and does.”― William Faulkner